Book Review: The Shack

The Shack

Why does a good God allow suffering in the world? It’s a question that comes up time and time again. As people who live in a fallen world, we are constantly confronted with tragic events. Why do good people die? Why are we attacked by natural disasters? If there is a God, why isn’t he doing his job? Why does he let bad things happen if he’s all that he’s cracked up to be?

Everyone struggles with this issue, Christian or not. We want someone to be held accountable for things that go wrong. As a Christian, it can be difficult to reconcile the God of love with the God who allows evil to exist in this world. What if there was a book that could explain this? What if there is a book that could help us understand who God is and what he has done? If only there was a book that could clearly explain God. The Shack is being put forward as the solution. The Shack is being put forward as a great way to understand God. Unfortunately, The Shack should not be a place you go to for answers.

The Shack is written by William Young. It is a work of fiction that tells the story of Mack, a man who has experienced tragedy in his life. He felt that he had escaped his dysfunctional and damaging childhood. But when his daughter is the victim of a serial killer, he descends into dispair. Then one day, he receives a note in his letter box. It’s literally a message from God, telling Mack to meet with him in the Shack where the daughter was killed. Mack goes to the Shack and spends the weekend with God, talking through his issues and growing in his knowledge of who God is and God’s plan for this world.

I can understand the appeal of this book. I can understand how it could be of comfort to someone who has known a tragic loss. I can understand how it could inspire someone who is searching for a real and meaningful relationship with God. I just wish it had done it in a way that didn’t reek of heresy.

The thing that strikes you as most jarring as you read the book is the depiction of God. All three of him. There’s God the Father, who is presented as an African-American woman named Papa. There’s Jesus, a Middle Eastern man in work clothes and a tendency to be a bit clumsy. And there’s Sarayu, an Asian female who drifts in and out of view, semi transparent, who is the Holy Spirit. For me, this sent off alarm bells. God is a God who reveals himself. Through his Word, the Bible, he has made himself known. The Father we cannot see. He relates to us as a Father – the language of the Bible always uses masculine terms to describe him. By making him a being with physical appearance, the appearance of a woman none the less, is idolatry. We are not to make graven images of God. I believe that this is what Young has done in his depiction of the Trinity. Sure, show us a human, Middle Eastern Jesus. That’s how Jesus was revealed to us. But to depict The Father and The Holy Spirit in this way is contrary to the revelation of God.

How The Shack treats God’s revelation to us is my major concern with this work, over and above his depiction of the Trinity. God has revealed himself through his prophets, through his son and through his Word, the Bible. Yet the Bible and any organised form of Christianity that seeks to make the Bible known are constantly undermined. Instead, we are effectively told to take what ever we thought we knew about God and faith and replace it with Young’s teaching. This is a teaching about relationships over doctrine. A teaching about finding God in your own way and your own time. A teaching about looking for the word of God any where BUT the Word of God. We live in a culture where what is new and interesting is more valued than what is old and trustworthy. That’s an attitude we need to repent of. We need to look at our Christian heritage with respect and honour – taking lessons from what they got right as well as what they got wrong. But most of all we need to recognise that while God may talk to us in all kinds of ways, if those “messages from God” are inconsistent with the Word he spoke in the Bible, then they are wrong and not from God. We are to treasure the Bible and constantly return to it.

Through out The Shack I felt at times like throwing my copy of the book against a wall. Words were being put into the mouth of God that were not consistent with the Bible. The God of The Shack exists the way he does because of the creation. He doesn’t know love except through us. That is wrong. This is a creation centric approach to God. This is mankind trying to make himself important by giving himself a starring role in the very nature of existence. This is man bringing God down and elevating himself so they meet halfway. God is God. God is sovereign. God is unchanging. God does not need us nor change just because we exist. Yet he loves us all the same. Mack is not only the central character of the book, but, symbolically, the centre of all creation. Wanting to be like God got us into this mess in the first place. Wanting to be the significant part in the plans of God is not much better.

God is a holy God. The Temple system of the Old Testament clearly demonstrates this. At the very centre of the Temple is the Holy of Holies. This is where God dwells and meets with his people. The Holy and the Unclean can never, ever meet. Only one person was ever allowed into the Holy of Holies. This was the High Priest. Once a year, he would undergo rituals and sacrifices to not only make himself clean, but holy enough to come before God. The other priests would tie a rope around him, because if the High Priest died while in that special room, then they could not go in after him, they needed to yank him out with the rope. Meeting with God was serious business. Encountering God forces people to their knees in fear and reverence. Yet Mack meets with God in the most casual of ways. He eats with him, jokes with him, swears in front of him, challenges his authority. Again, this is not the God of the Bible. There is no way Mack could come before God so casually and so defiantly. This warm, fuzzy God of The Shack is not the God of the Bible.

Yet this God is appealing. Who wouldn’t want to interact with a God that bakes cookies while she dances? The problem is when this false god becomes so appealing that people reject the Bible and the God within. The Shack doesn’t help us understand God, it replaces him with an inferior, created being. That’s idolatry plain and simple. Following God isn’t about us. It isn’t about finding a god that fits inside our little boxes of what we’d like him to be. It isn’t about finding our own way to him and communicating via “relationships”. God has made himself known to us. He has told us who he is and what he has done and what he is going to do. He has told us how to relate to him and everything we need to know to be in a relationship with him. He has told us this through the Bible. Anything that says otherwise leads away from God and should be rebuked and avoided.

Some may say it is just a work of fiction. I don’t buy that line of argument. This book is an evangelistic tool. It not only sets itself above criticism, but encourages the reader to preach its message. In the forward, the author writes “Mack would like you to know that if you happen upon this story and hate it, he says, “Sorry… but it wasn’t primarily written for you.”” These words put me on the defensive. I was being told that if I disagreed with what was written, if I reacted badly against it, then “it wasn’t primarily written for you.” To me, that’s being told that if you don’t like it, go away. It’s saying to me that I’m not allowed to be critical of this work. Sorry, I don’t buy that.

Secondly, any work that spends two pages in the back of the book encouraging me to spread the word about The Shack is pretty suspect. We’re encouraged to get the word out there so that it may be turned into a movie. We are asked to buy multiple copies and give them away as gifts so they can get “a magnificent glimpse into the nature of God that is not often presented in our culture”. We are encouraged to blog about how The Shack has changed our lives (works of fiction don’t change lives. Gospels do). We are to go out of our way to spread the “good news” of The Shack. This is not a work of fiction. This is a new way of thinking. This is a false gospel.

There’s an audience for this book. Over one million copies in print. A Christian bookstore I know of ordered in copies of this book because they were getting customer after customer asking after it. They didn’t order in any more copies after they read it and found out what it was really about. People are going to buy this book, read this book, and be fooled into thinking that this accurately represents the Bible. It does not.

I found this review by Tim Challies really helpful. The site in general has stacks of book reviews that (from the few I’ve read) seem well worth reading.

For more on the depiction of the Trinity in The Shack, Mark Driscoll has a few things to say.

If you read The Shack, don’t read it because it will help you understand God. Don’t read it because it will help you understand suffering. Read it because you want to be aware of what false teaching is out there, especially one that attracts almost a million readers.

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6 responses to “Book Review: The Shack”

Thank you for this review! This book needs to be spoken against. I fear for all of the people out there, already prone to reject the bible and the church as an institution and instead accept some false diety which sounds more like eastern mysticism to me! Thank you!

I just came across your blog, and I’ve read a handful of your entries. Elsewhere you discuss your misgivings with Exo Day. I’d never heard of Exo Day before, but based on your description, I would have doubts about it too; it seems geared for the sort who think religion is like a sports team: you choose a side and then root for it.

For me, and I suspect for you as well, my walk with God is not something I do on Sunday mornings and Wednesday evenings. I don’t believe in such-and-such doctrine because Pastor told me to. For me, God is a real and immediate presence in my life, and He’s someone I’d be dealing with even if no organized religion had ever been invented. That kind of personal relationship with God doesn’t fit very easily with the here-I’m-a-Christian-there-I-am-not sensibility you ascribe to Exo Day.

I haven’t read “The Shack” and I’m not going to. So never mind about that. I have seen other attempts at pop spiritualism which, while shiny and attractive, are fatally flawed. Whenever we try to modulate the teachings of Christianity to make it more palatable, what we end up with is no longer Christianity. I think you would agree with that, because that’s what your basic argument against “The Shack” boils down to.

So you and I seem to be on the same page. Turn with me then to Gen 18:20-33, and of course John 3:14-17. God is sovreign, and you’re right that we run into trouble when we ascribe too-human characteristics to Him. (The Holy Spirit is a ghostly Asian woman? Puh-lease…) But it is also true that God loves us and wants us to be happy, that we are given dominion over the all the earth, and that we are to have every tear wiped from our eyes. Clearly, God cares about us. He was moved to sacrifice His son to pay our ransom– a ransom that was our own fault.

So I think in your reaction to the book you are right at the edge of getting carried away, of getting all doctrinaire and sports-teamy on us. William Young may have twisted it around into something unreal, but untwisted we do, in fact, have relationships with God in which he intervenes and interacts with us. Just not in the way that Young is apparently describing.

Thanks for taking the time to have a look around and post, Alamanach. You may have a point about me getting carried away about The Shack. That’s the kind of reaction I had to the book. And coming from a conservative evangelical background, I do have a tendency to fall back on the doctrines I value so highly. Sometimes I need to repent of that and open my mind up a bit. Other times the strong reaction needs to be put out there to jolt people into realising that something isn’t quite right. The Shack is so subtle in its approach that perhaps a subtle, restrained response would be lost.
Look forward to hearing your POV on other posts!

I found the book very enjoying and it drew me to a deeper relationship with G-d. The revelation knowledge that I experienced was spirit quickening, as well as, enlightening. If you are grounded and rooted in the word, then you should have no problem with this book, because it is just fiction. If you know the truth, then the truth shall keep you free of all deception. The author never said that this was a replacement to the Bible. It is a Fiction novel, not non-fiction. Additionally, the author never stated that this book was the core of Chritianity or any other religion. If you are looking for theology in a fiction noveI, then this book is not for you. However, it is a great read. I found compassion, brokeness, forgiveness, love, grace, and mercy to abound in this novel. I believe that we all need something or someone to challenge us, during our spiritual walk, and draw us closer to Him. The Shack will prompt you to experience an encounter with the “true” living G-d and cry out to Papa. Shalom!

Enjoyed your review of “The Shack” Thank you for taking the time to share.

I was not in total agreement with The Shack (I am not in total agreement with several of my favorite authors).Any book that includes conversations with God is bound to receive criticism. How can anyone put words in God’s mouth? But this is one moving book! I smiled, cried, pondered, prayed, and repented as I read ( I have been hurt a lot in churches so I was profoundly impacted.). I read it twice and now listening to the audio. Amazing! Be sure to check out “The Shack Blog and Forum.

Pop Culture Christ

Our world has all kinds of weird and wacky ideas about Jesus. He's in our movies, our TV shows, our books, our music, everywhere. But how do they compare to the Jesus of the Bible? What about other areas of Christianity, such as God, Scripture, or faith? That's the aim of Pop Culture Christ. To look at how Pop Culture views Christianity and how Christianity views Pop Culture.

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